Evening Republican, Volume 17, Number 276, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 18 November 1913 — Page 3
STOP THAT BACKACHE There's nothing more discouraging than a constant backache. Yon are lame when you awake. Pains pierce you when you bend or lift It’s hard to rest and next day it's the same old story. Pain in the back is nature’s warning of kidney ills. Neglect may pave the way to dropsy, gravel, or other serious kidney sickness. Don’t delay—begin using Doan's Kidney Pills—the remedy that has been curing backache and kidney trouble for over fifty years. A MICHIGAN CASH “Beery Pteture . Peter Loncks, LeelaTells a Story." nan St.,FnmktortJHlch., JT nil ii||. , ffT Sara : “1 bad awfnl b&ckaches brongbtobbjbard ft '.AX work. 1 couldn’t control Vkjy the kidney secretions Iv/gM and In the morning X was so lame and tired I hardly get out of My back acbed JKBW terribly and If X tried to iPllifliaSrPv stoop, lbadsbarptwlngs' es. I often got so,dlsty Wiir that I almost topUm f IP pled over. After the doctors had falled, I tried Doan's 1 IC2&. Kidney Pills and six L* wHjjjP boxes cured me." Get Doan’s at Any Store, 50c a Box DOAN'S “rVL’iV FOSTER-MILBURN CO, BUFFALO, N.Y.
400,000 [rT|| Settlers a Year show that the populaI tlou of Canada injlkllirJKtra I creased during 1913, |by the addition of IliyfVE’ t 1400,000 new settlers J from the United 4 A States and Europe. tMW' M Most of these have v’jl A gone on farms In the iSflfly provinces of Manltoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta. Lord William Percy, an Eng—Hsb Nobleman, says: “The . possibilities and opportum- % rat.- "T ties offered by the Canadian West are so Infinitely greater SribfkMXirjf li than those which exist In Bngland > that It seems absurd to think that people should be mittrcffi* l Impeded from coming to the if country where they can most JfH easily and certainly Improve New districts are being opened up, which will make accessible a great number of homesteads in districts especially adapted to mixed farming and grain For Illustrated literature and reduced railway rates, apply to Superintendent Immigration, Ottawa. Canada, or —- U.BrssfMss.<l2»erdu«hLlT.BH«.,Drtci(s N. V. Mclanet, 178 Jsffstton **s„ OstrolL W.L.DOUGLAS SHOES Wmh’ißA'Y Ife.’ Misses, Boys. Children I m SI 1 rises and W. L. Douglas shoes are famous rl%i| everywhere. Why not give them a L f± mSb. txlsl t The value you will reoelve l yfc your money will astonish you. # ;i -*'Xn you would visit our factory, i ''lrMl'ij 11 it Ike largest In the world under 006 and see how carefully W. L. Douglas shoes are made, you would understand why they are ffai \ V»;\ warranted to look better, fit better, lu%i bold theirshape and wear longer than other makes for the price. Your dealer should supply you with sv-' them. Don't take a substitute. None Jtfcry genuine without W. L. Douglas #V’-' name stamped on bottom. Shoes AiA. VM scut everywhere, direct from faoNlaENl Y& tory, by Parcel Post, postage free. Now ta “e time to begin to save money on Vr'-JSk your footwear. Write today for illus-\W33-r-V trated Catalog showing how to order WBiujii by mall.' W. U DOUGLAS, Constipation Vanishes Forever Prompt Relief —Permanent Cure CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS never fail. Purely vegeta- >-p ble act surely jH|PADTrDX but gently on the liver. MfPrSEaSr ■ jI.T-Kr Stop after jSKOgmr ■ IVER dinner dis- 3 PILLS, tress—cure M—M indigestion,^ improve the complexion, brighten the eyes. SHALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature Ilf NUFORM W K CORSETS ▼ Ufm SI.OO UP shapely, long Hue which retain their good lines permanently. Contll or batiste, lace trimmed—boning guaranteed not to rust. No discomfort in wearing them. 1 W r ELASTINE. \A/ K REDUSO ?T • 13 » Corsets $3 The perfect corset for stout figures. Wearproof, elastlne gores give comfort. At your dealer's or direct, postpaid. Catalogue free. WEINGARTEN BROTHERS, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS WANTED We will pay you a splendid salary or liberal commission and give you a share of our profits. Make •3.00 to SI 0.00 dally. Customer, buy eagerly whan shown remarkable advertising plan and TO low prioed articles with which yon give valuable promin me New, up-to-date, beautifully Illustrated, 71 page catalogs with your name on cover supplied sot distribution among your customers. Our new piaa bring* yon order* by mall. Credit given. Beet seaeon now. Writ* quickly for absolutely sure moneymaking opportunity. BEST MFO. CO., Box SSfl, PROVIDENCE, B. I. jjHfflKri A toilet preparation of msrtk Bel pa to eradicate dandruff. _ For Restorms Color end Beauty to Gray or Faded Hair, learned 1.00 at PrufgW. ■JfcajI.I.H.UTI-l.lt^hi |S(b*s« Cough Syrup, ?•«*• Good. Da* U |Hf te Um *- • ft .-I it ■■ "
ON A PHILIPPINE RAILROAD
Type of Locomotive That la Found Most Suitable for Use in the Islands. j ,
FLED BEFORE TRAIN
DEER CHASED TWENTY-FOUR MILES BY LOCOMOTIVE , , . ff~ J ' ;• ' ’ V > Evidently Fascinated by the Steel Rails, They Remained on the Track Until One Had to Be Run Down. The driver of a freight train In the Gatineau valley drove a pair of deer 24 miles in a little over an hour, his train moving at a fairly uniform rate all that time, relates the Montreal Star. At the end of the run, one of the deer, which was very fat, collapsed, and fell. The other stood stupidly staring at the big engine as It stopped, but’ when the men descended from~lt, jumped from the track and escaped. The deadly faseftmtion of the steel rails was well exemplified on the Kafcubazua plains in the same section, when a pair of Scotch Stag hounds were seen passing from the open country from the north driving a deer before them. Without heeding the shouts of. the men at the station, the hunted thing, which had evidently come from a long distance, bounded along with some difficulty following all the curves of the track down to the Stag creek bridge, through which it tripped and was then killed by the hounds. The section men on the Pontiac railway chased a little herd of three deer on a down grade, for some miles with their hand car, and ran them right up to an approaching engine. As they stopped to lift their machine clear of the track, the poor things slackened their speed, looked helplessly as they ran on to right and left and allowed the fengine to send them all to destruction. Probably at night It is the glare of the headlight which attracts, confuses and then hypnotizes the deer, and causes their deatl^^ An engine “running light,” one dark night, was derailed by • a big huff moose it had run into. The driver explained that he had seen the animal standing on the track, staring intently at the approaching headlight, but until close up to it had not imagined that It would remain there to be killed. He had, however, whistled, and then reversed his engine as it drew near the moose. For this he was greatly blamed by the superintendent, who explained that having made the mißtake of supposing that the moose would not, or could not divert Its gaze from that glaring light, he should have crowded on all Bteam In the hope of throwing the huge carcasß aside with the cowcatcher. Old locomotive drivers are well aware of the hypnotizing effect of the headlight of an engine upon the deer family, and when'possible stop and drive the creatures aside. A little group of these men discussing the matter recited numerous instances of'running into deer, which when once they have fixed their eyes on It, stand as though paralyzed in the fierce light of the locomotives. One of, them spoke of having on two occasions actually, with his hands, pushed deer from before his train, the poor things having apparently lost their i)ower of movement.
Large Japanese Railroad Depot
The most elaborate railway station In the far east, the new Central railway station at Tokio, will be completed next year at a cost of approximately $1,400,000. The main building Is 1,083 by 132 feet, and the station Is being constructed on a centrally located 60-acre tract of land which will be decorated with Japanese gardens, fountains, etc.
Sixty Years an Engineer.
R. S. Slgtnan, Asheville, N. C., has retired at eighty-one, after nerving sixty years as a railroad engineer without having had a serious accident i
THE EVENING REPUBLICAN. RENSSELAER, IND.
ELECTRICITY TO STOP TRAINS
Experiments Made in Bavaria Show the Idea to Be Perfectly Feasible. Experiments have recently been made on the Bavarian state railways ,with a method of stopping railway trains electrically. The system Is referred to as one of wireless telegraph communication between a wire strung on the roof of the baggage car and any telegraph or telephone lines running along the track. Probably induction is used rather than Hertzian waves to convey the signal to the train. The apparatus operates either a bell or a light signal in the cab of the locomotive or it will operate directly on the air brakes. The system calls for the installation of a sending station at frequent intervals, so that-if it be desired to stop a train because of some accident, this may be effected from almost any point along the track. — Scientific American.
Women as Railway Servants.
A signalwoman has been employed on the line between Morebath and Bampton, near the Somerset border of Devon, for the last 23 years, and another at Lee Crossing, near Minehead. But women are employed on the railways in other places besides the West country. Rosemount station, on the Caledonian railway, and Langford, Essex, have station-mistresses. At Braystones,, on the Furness railway, and at Dovenby station, Cumberland, there are women who not only manage the signals, but issue tickets and do all the work in connection with the trains. More women probably are employed on the railways in Russia than in any other European country. There are computed to be between 20,000 and 30,000 women working 6n the Russian state railways. They act as gate-keep-ers, clerks and telegraphers. Their salaries are small. Women attendants at the stations receive only about £4 ss. a year, with free lodging and certain extras. Women clerks receive about £4B a year.—Family Herald.
Just Escaped Death.
This, thrilling sensation of being wedged In the points of a railway line and seeing a train bearing down on him, was experienced at Crewe the other night, by a signal-fitter on the London & Northwestern railway, writes a correspondent. He had been sitting on the line laying cables when the points were pulled over for g train to pass, and his flesh was tightly gripped. He was hopelessly held down and in Intense agony when he heard the oncoming train. / The man nearly fainted with pain, but he shout ed the attention of some men, but they could not release him. Taking the situation in at a glance, one of the men some distance off risked his life by leaping on the train, scrambling up into the guard's van, and applying the brakes. The train stopped a few yards from the signal-fitter. Even then the man was pot out of his trouble, for the signals had to be pulled off before he could be released.
Useless Enterprise.
The following communication w&e recently received by a gentleman resident in the north of England: “We understand that you are contemplating matrimony, and tender you our congratulations. ..If you will advise us of the amount you are prepared to I spend—spy, two hundred pounds —we will set up a model jxouse in our establishment, so that you can see what every room will look like In addition, without any charge, we will select decorations to harmonize with the furniture and supervise the workmen. So, without the slightest trouble to yourself, you Will find every piece of furniture placed exactly at you desire in an approprlately-deo orated house.”... . The reply was: “Unless the sum named, include! the provision of a bride it ig uselesr to me. Bu( try toy cousin; he i« fiu unfortunate man!”
Pain In Back and Rheumatism are the daily torment of To effectually cure these troubles yon must redtove the cause. Foley Kidney Pills begin to work for you from the first dose, and exert so direct and beneficial an action in the kidneys and bladder that the pain and torment of kidney trouble soon disappears. FREE TO ALL SUFFERERST if you feel ‘OUT OF *ORT*“KUN DOWNOr'GOTTHK BLUSS' 'SUFFER from KIDNEY, BLADDER, NERVOUS DISEASES, CHRONIC WEAKNESSES,ULCERS.SEIN ERUPTIONS,FILEB, writs for my FRCI book. THE MOST instructive MEDICAL BOOK EVER WRITTEN4T TELLS ALL about tfaeae DISEASES and tha remarkable cures effected by THI NEW FRENCH REMEDY. N.l. N. 2. NA THERAPION irss H It's tke remedy lor TOUR OWN ailment. Don't seod a cauL Absolutely FREE. No'foUowup'clrcuUrs. DR LECLIRO Mas. Co. xuvssstoce kd. Hampstead, London, £m. quick relief 1 ElllHW E'llMr.U'lJ EYE TROUBLES f 840 ACBE floe farm forsale In MereerCo., Mo. 34 ml. nortn of Mereer and 3 ml. south of LJnevllie, la. Bargain if taken soon. In Beasts A. LlndaAy.l-riaaalaa.Se. CADM FAD C*l C No drouth, no show. w. 8. rAMI run DALE, BUVE.PUSAUILA. FLORIDA W. N. U„ CHICAGO, NO. 45-1913.
ANOTHER SIDE TO MATTER
One Man Has Discovered That Offering Floral Bouquets to the Living Is Not All Joy. “There has been a good deal in the paragraph section of our exchanges for some weeks to the effect that you should give the bouquets now; not wait to lay them on the coffin lid.” says Tom Thompson In the Howard Courant. Ella Wheeler before' she was a Wilcox wrote a poem on that theme; Chancellor Bradford at th 6 Chautauqua dinged it Into us, and most of us have been affected by it. Bjxt say, my brother-sister, have you tried it yet? I have—twice. First, I tried it on a very dear friend of the other sex, and she began to get nervous likei she thought I was trying to flirt with her. Then I quit, for I am pre-eminently no flirt. Next I tried it on a brother in my lodge and Sunday school, and he shied off like he expected me to ask him for a loan. So after this I shall water my flower beds and raise nice bouquets for funeral occasions exclusively. Very few people know how to receive floral offerings, anyway.—Kansas City Star.
Must Walt a Bit.
The Title group at,the side of the road waited until Stealthly Stlggins returned from the nearby farmhouse. “Poor pickings,” he muttered as he threw down a scrawny beef bone and a half loaf of bread. "Where’s dat improvement in handouts youse promised?” demanded Muggsy Jones. Happy Higgin shook his head reproachfully. “You gotter wait,” •he .said, “till de public adjusts itself to de new tariff." —Cleveland Plain Dealer.
SCALP ITCHED AND BURNED Greenwood, Ind. —“First my hair began to fall, then my scalp itched and burned when I became warm. I bad pimples on my scalp; my hair was falling out gradually until I had scarcely any hair on my head. I couldn’t keep the dandruff off at all. My hair was dry and lifeless and I lost rest at night from the terrible itching sensation. I would pull my hat off and scratch my head any place I happened to be. “For several years I was bothered with pimples on ifly face. Some of them were hard red spots, some were full of matter, and many blackheads. I was always picking at them and caused them to be sore. They made my face look so badly I was ashamed to be seen. “I tried massage creams for my face and all kinds, of hair tonic and homemade remedies, but they only made things worse. Nothing did the work until I used Cuticura Soap and Ointment! I washed my face with the Cuticura Soap, then put -plenty of Cuticura Ointment on. Three months’ use of Cuticura Soap and Ointment has made my face as smooth and clean as ean be.” (Signed) C. M. Hamilton, Sept. 24, 1912. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address postcard “Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston.”—Adv. Perpetual Motion. . One may well be sure that there is no “perpetual motion machine.” For this purpose xpachines have been constructed. from time immemorial, but nothing has ever come of it. Men have gone mad on the subject, but without any practical results. It was demonstrated long ago by Sir Isaac Newton and De la Hire that perpetual motion is impossible of attainment. Even the solar system, the most wonderful machine pf which we have any knowledge, will run down In the course of time, some say in about $11,000,000 of years now. The Base Ones to “Kid.” "That joke you printed about your wife—did It make her angry?” , “Bless you, no. I spent a half hour trying to explain the point of It to her and finally got angry myself." Coughs vanish in s night. Dean’s Mentholated Cough Drops soothe the throet. effecting a speedy cure—fie St all Druggists. A M.— , The man who falls In love with a woman at sight by moonlight may fall in another direction by sunlight Worms expelled promptly from the human system with Eh-. Peer/ 1 * Vermifuge “Dead •hot.” Adv. The principal Ingredient in lack is common sense. s
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES Color more goods brighter and faster colors than any other drt ‘ One 10c package colon all fibers. They dye m coJd water better than any other dye. You can dye any garment without ripping apart. WRITE FOR FREE booklet. calendarTblotters. etc. MONBQg DRUG COMPANY, Qalacy, lU.
NOT AS BAD AS ALL THAT
Judge Resents Attitudes of "Funny Men” as to Present Tendency in Dress. Judge Ralph S. Latshaw squelched, in Kansas City, the othjyj day, an incipient movement against the closefitting Skirt with a slash. “Narrow skirts don’t mean immoral, ity,” said Judge Latshaw. "One of the most vicious epoch was when hoop skirts were worn. “Why, I Remember when it was considered immodest for a woman to arrange her coiffure so as to show her ears. We have advanced.. “We have advanced, but we haven't advanced as far as the jokesmlths and cartoonists would pretend. “ ‘Doctor,’ said a pretty girl —so runs the latest joke—doctor, I want you to vaccinate me, please, where it won’t shotv.’ “ ‘Humph,’ said the gruff doctor. ‘I guess you’ll have to take it internally, then.’ ’’
Preposterous
Old Party—Do you stop at the Savoy, my good man? • ’Bus Conductor —What, me, lady—on 30 bob a week! —London Opinion.
Wright’s Indian Vegetable Pills are sold with and without soluble sugar coating. They regulate the bowels, invigorate the liver and purify the blood. Adv. Does a rubber plant In the household bring husband and wife closer together, or is the contrary true? Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflammation.allay a pain, cures wind a bottled* Every married man knows that it takes but one to make a quarrel. Use Roman Eye Balsam for scalding sensation in eyes and Inflammation of eyes or eyelids. Adv. The best thing about hope is that it’s absolutely free.
Rheumatism, Sprains Backache, Neuralgia _ - “Yet, daughter, that's good stuft The pain fat /■pl my back it allgone —I never taw anything work f /gffl at quickly at Sloan’s Liniment.” Thousands of { j(IS grateful people voice the tame opinion. Here’s » -g edMiff the proof. '“I was troubled with a very bad pate te my |RgflH back for some time. I went to a doctor but be 1 W AMP a did not do me any good, so 1 J—ifiCT a i purchased a bottle of Sloan’s nHjmf t aV Liniment, and now lam a well 1 mgtM woman. I always keep a hot,x\\ '®b §& BBS tie of Sloan’s Liniment in the «r IBPIKIiMvW flPjk OH bonne.” Mlit Matilda Cotton. l|fi jUI |2,l 364 Myrtlo Am, Brooklyn, N. T. p^wwaiiatw, V iba "We have used Sloan's liniment for over six years and IaMHIHI IHI wßy found it the best we ever used. F H When my wife bad sciatic % Lmiment. praise it “I was ill for a lon* time with a severely sprained ankle. I got a bottle of Sloan’s Liniment and now lam able to be about andcan walk a great deal. I write this because I think yon deserve a lot of credit for putting such a fine Liniment on the market and I shall always taka time to recommend Or. Sloan's Liniment. Cbflf* Ro IdM, £fliAMOWy Jklfm * . .. .. ' '■’ 1 . ■ SLOANS LINIMENT AtaPPsalsss Mi.Boa.and|ljft slnie , itolis<Hrslwkailnma«sMlalsti Addreas Dr. Enrl S. Sloan. In*. • • a Boetan, Msm. I This is the heater that has Approved by over half a won the throne through the million families in the United popular vote of the people. States last year —enjoying King of Oil Heaters—be- twice the sale of any other, cause the most pleasurable Because it is a practical necesto own and the most eco- sity and a positive economy, nomical to maintain. And by far, the best of its kind. 1 The**Perfection” I I f Smokeless OH Heater is needed in every home, no matter what its beating facilities are. Handy to carry from room to room. Hi you can have heat where you want it, Iffl when yon want it. - And in the mild days f of Fall and Spring it saves the cost of t I J: keeping up furnace fires. It will save its small cost during the first cold spell of El] winter. I Smokeless! Odorless! I Ten hours’ warmth from one single gallon of oil. No smoke, no odor and no H| danger to contend with. An ornament to any room and a neces- fin sity in every home. | \ Ask your dealer to show you the various models. Descriptive booklet mailed bee. L j STANDARD OIL COMPANY I (AN INDIANA CORPORATION) " H, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS
WOMAN ESCAPES OPERATION By Timely Use of Lydia E. Pinkham’* Vegetable Compound. Here Is her own statement. Cary, Maine.—'* I feel it a duty I owe to all suffering women to tell what Lydia E. Pinkham'a ■.JjamaMl Vegetable Compo“ n d did for me. ifL One year ago I found Hi/ myself a terrible suf;3ppj| serer. I had pains Ilip*' Jp||| in both sides and such a soreness I could scarcely stra *Khten up at 7/\ times. My back / //! 'f f ach ed, I had no ap- — 'petite and was so nervous I could not sleep, then I would he so tired mornings that I could scarcely get around. It seemed almost impossible to move or do a bit of work and I thought I never would be any better until I submitted to an operation. I commenced taking Lydia ELPinkham’s Vegetable Compound and soon felt like s new woman. I had no pains, slept well, had good appetite and was fat and could do almost all my own work for a family of four. I shall always feel that I ovfe my good health to your medicine. ’’—Mrs. Hayward Sowers, Cary, Maine. ' If you are ill do not drag along until an operation is necessary, but at once takp Lydia E. Pinkham *s Vegetable Compound. If you have the slightest doubt that Lydia £. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound will help you,write to Lydia E.Pinkham Medicine Co. (confidential) for advice. Yohr letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman* pwi held In strict confidence.
